0

I am trying to get 3 most frequent words out of string and print sentences which include those words. Currently I found a lot of information about how to get most frequent words in string, however I'm stuck with getting only 3 of them and how to print sentences which include them. Currently I'm in this state:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body>
<p id="demo"></p>
<script>
var text = '<pre>'This is a sentence with few words in it. Repeated things. This is a sentence with words that are repeated. I don't need this text.';

var wordRegExp = /\w+(?:'\w{1,2})?/g;
var words = {};
var matches;
while ((matches = wordRegExp.exec(text)) != null)
{
    var word = matches[0].toLowerCase();
    if (typeof words[word] == "undefined")
    {
        words[word] = 1;
    }
else
{
    words[word]++;
}
}

var wordList = [];
for (var word in words)
{
if (words.hasOwnProperty(word))
{
    wordList.push([word, words[word]]);
}
}

wordList.sort(function(a, b) { return b[1] - a[1]; });

var n = 100;
var message = ["The top words are:"];
for (var i = 0; i < n; i++)
{
if (wordList[i][0].length>=5){
message.push(wordList[i][0] + " - " + wordList[i][1] + " occurance" +
            (wordList[i][1] == 1 ? "" : "s"));      

document.write(wordList[i][0] + "<br />");
}
}

alert(message.join("\n"));


</script>

</body>
</html>

I' using if (wordList[i][0].length>=5) to avoid conjunctions, because most of them are made of 3-4 letters.

I should get answer like this:

'This is a sentence with few words in it. Repeated things. This is a sentence with words that are repeated.'

Because 3 most repeated words would be: "sentence" "repeated" and "words". Do you have any idea how to achieve this? Some guidance would be appreciated.

4
  • 1
    What do you mean exactly by "word" and why do you add this optional group to your pattern: (?:'\w{1,2})?? Aug 8, 2014 at 14:00
  • To match the most amount possible. Is that not needed? By word I mean all lower cased A-Z words. Aug 8, 2014 at 14:40
  • is it for things like: don't, doesn't, isn't, etc.? Do you want to take them as a single word? Aug 8, 2014 at 14:46
  • Yes, exactly. I do want to include them as a single word. Aug 8, 2014 at 14:54

1 Answer 1

0

Here's an example where I focused on clarity rather than performance:

FIDDLE DEMO (corrected to top 3 rather than 2)

var text = "This is a sentence with few words in it. Repeated things. This is a sentence with words that are repeated. I don't need this text.";

var top3Words = topWordsIn(text, 3); //["sentence", "words"]

function topWordsIn(str, top) {
    var occurences = wordsOccurence(str),
        outConjuctions = function (word) { return word.length > 4; },
        byOccurenceDesc = function (a, b) { return occurences[b] - occurences[a]; };

    return Object.keys(occurences)
       .filter(outConjuctions)
       .sort(byOccurenceDesc)
       .slice(0, top || void(0));
}

function wordsOccurence(str) {
    var occurences = {};

    forWordsIn(str, function (word) {
        if (occurences[word]) ++occurences[word];
        else occurences[word] = 1;
    });

    return occurences;
}

function forWordsIn(str, cb) {
    var rx = /\b\w+\b/g, match;

    while (match = rx.exec(str)) cb(match[0].toLowerCase());
}

Then, once you have top words, you can simply tokenize your string into sentences (I just splitted on dots here), and filter out sentences that do not contain top words.

text.split(/\./).filter(function (sentence) {
    var topWordsRx = new RegExp('\\b(' + top2Words.join('|') + ')\\b', 'i');

    return topWordsRx.test(sentence);
});
//["This is a sentence with few words in it", " This is a sentence with words that are repeated"]

Note that you could make the algorithm more efficient by keeping track to which sentence the word belongs during the words tokenization process.

2
  • Thank you, this really helped me and will guide me further! Aug 8, 2014 at 15:13
  • Great! I'm glad I could help! Splitting the work into many understandable functions makes the task much more easier to understand as well, keep that in mind.
    – plalx
    Aug 8, 2014 at 15:16

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.